- DescriptionJoin CET's college leadership for informal, weekly drop-in sessions to shape your student experience!
- Websitehttps://www.rit.edu/events/cet-meet-deans
More from Events
- Sep 2411:00 AMLearn more about career opportunities at Stroud International!Stroud International will be hosting a recruitment table on campus! At Stroud, our people are our greatest asset. Coming from various backgrounds, each Stroudie brings something different to the dynamic, driven, and energetic culture we foster. We are looking for passionate students to join our firm as entry-level Associate Consultants and would love to connect with all Engineering, Sciences, and Mathematics students and alumni. For more information or to access the virtual link, visit Career Connect > Events
- Sep 2412:00 PMMomentum I: Leadership Development Program (Track A)Momentum I is RIT's centralized leadership launchpad to introduce students to meaningful competency development and to increase their sense of belonging through connections to key leadership opportunities including Orientation Leaders, Residence Advisors, Disability Leadership Scholars, and so much more.
- Sep 2412:30 PMFederal Job Search: Effectively Navigating Career Fairs to HiringGet job tips from Brian Haynes, NSA retiree and RIT alum, on:
- Sep 2412:30 PMChemistry and Materials Science Seminar: Time for a New Approach to Teaching General Chemistry?Chemistry and Materials Science SeminarTime for a New Approach to Teaching General Chemistry?
- Sep 241:00 PMCross Cultural ConnectionsCalling all International Students interested in connecting with other International Students in a safe space!
- Sep 242:00 PMFall Conable Lecture | Social Innovation: Science, Technology, and SocietyThis presentation reorients the history of sociological scholarship in science and technology studies (STS) over the last several decades to what is now known as science, technology, and society studies (ST&S). Doucet-Battle situates that politically fraught history within longer standing, and as we shall see, perennial conversations about scientific objectivity, classification, and their ethical intersections with race, class, gender, and power. Doucet-Battle offers a generative space to think critically about the sociocultural interplay between scientific knowledge production and technological innovation; specifically, the ways research networks reveal embedded social obligations to give, receive, and reciprocate, each reflecting complex sets of historical relationships of bioethical consequence.